Ligonier Banner., Volume 59, Number 46A, Ligonier, Noble County, 4 January 1926 — Page 4
1926 Christmas Savi gs Club ~ Now Open for Membership Here again you have the opportunity to accumulate money in this easy and most satisfactory way. By takihg membership in one or more classes}and making regular weekly payments for fifty weeks you can have any desired amount for next year’s Christmas shopping, or for any other purpose. ' Why not make your decision now ? Your first payment makes you a member. No fees. No trouble. , : CLASSES OF MEMBERSHIP : Weekly » paymenis . Bweeks $ 025 5050 $lOO % 200 $ 500 Tolal pay’ts ; | . : with interest 12.50 2550 51.00 102.00 - 255.00 : _ AND MANY OTHER CLASSES _ The Mier State Bank Figonier’s Largest Bank : Isigonier’s Oldest Bank | A Million Dollar Bank =
MON. JAN. 4 ~ Where Was I? ’A splendid comedy drama with the popular Reginald Denny also a Mack Sennet comedy. TUES., WED., THURS., JAN. 5-6-7 2 Pola Negri in - s Flowet of the Night Joseph vHer;gesheimer's origj}al screen story of colorful Californid®:in the gold diS(:O\_'_ery days The tale of a flaming Spanish belle who fought for honor and a sweetheart in the.lawless .days of ’49. The screen’s fiery empress of emotions was never better. - e - Also a news reo!'.. FRI. AND SAT. JAN. 89 Buck Jones in - : Hearts and Spurs - You know what to expect from him also a comedy. ; 8 SUN. AND MON. JAN. 10-11 Playing With Souls * With Jacqueline Logan, Clive Brooks and Mary Astor. E A strange dramatic revelation in which the clash of strong emotions sets the heart aflame—the story of a neglectful father a wordly mother and a lonely boy who trod the rose strewn path. A glowing love story set in Paris and sweeping through the pleasure resorts of gay France.. , . Also a comedy and a scenic review. TUES., WED., THURS., JAN. 12-18-14 The Goose Woman One of the best pictures in months.
Guest Coupon Good With One Paid ~ Admission on Mondays
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¥ (romwell Items, L Chas. Marley witnessed the reading of a will on his visit to. Ohio where a bequest of $5.00 was given to pay for dishes broken,by the testatrix while on a }visit to a neighbors home. John Sawyer returned from . Fort Wayne DMonday while there he says he had a chance to buy the only gun that was owned by Robinson Cruso_e ——He returned without it as he bought ;one the day before just like it. Large flocks of geese goimg south ‘passed near her Monday. Vern Hurlsey says they have probably decided to have a look at those Florida lots they bought last summer. - Merit and Dale Fitzpatrick of South Bend were here Saturday. : L. D. Young is home from Ohio. ‘ Frank Gleason of St. Joe who never }misses a visit here on Sunday arriv\led late his last trip. While at Garrett o friend of his said a toad. eats 100 worms, bugs and other insects every day. He started to count them and missed the train. - . Mrs. Neal Hontz is ill. _ Wayne Switzef was at Fort Wayne ‘Saturday. : . i. Johi} Godfrey visited at Etna Sunday. He says all that school trouble ‘there has been settled and would of ’never occured if one of the teachers !had not told the high school scholars there wasn’t any Santa Claus. Grant Fidler was a Kimmell visi‘tor Monday. . \, George Rodney was at Lima Ohio iinquiring what became of an elephant which he loaned for a fair and which was not returned apparently Lima Ohio is a bit careless about elephants. Maurice Lecounts was at Pierceton Monday learning the Charleston. Several here are taking a mail order course in plpumbing. Tom Farley failed to deliver his hogs here Saturday as promiséd. They up rooted some dynamite he had planted to hlow stumps with and made a meal of it. Now he is wondering how. long he will have to keep them before they are safe for market. Ross Hemberly atended a heavy weight 'wedding at South Bend Monday. He says the bride paid the $3 for the license but declined to pay the magistrate for his services until the certificate. had been presented to her personally. : Spall McMann was at Fort Wayne Saturday. _ . The Sparta Bank stockholders held a meeting this week. ‘ Miss- Anna Hunt returned to Chicago Monday. : ‘ Mrs. Sarah Mullin of Goshen visited here Sunday. o - Perry Kiser was at Goshen Monday.
“Soldiering” on Work Kot Modern Monopoly Th 2 cynics, who know that the world is ge'ting worse all the time, are sure that idleness and “soldiering on ‘%he job” are faults of the Tweatieth century. In the good old days everyone workad hard and conscientiously. But there have always been honest workmen and the other kind just as there are today. There is a curious old I'rench epic written by one who called himself the Grocer of Troyes in the Thirteenth century. Here is one passage quoted by M. Langyois in his “Life in France in the Middle Ages”: “When 1 finally make up my mind to work I take with me a young mate who knows nothing of the job, but I insist on his being paid the full wage of 12 denlers. When, at last, I get on the roof, I lay one tile in the time {t should take to lay elght or ten. I ease off and sing a song, then take a sleste between two slopes of the roof. It is then time to knock off for dinner, After that, it 1s soon supper time, so we leave work for that day. Of course, with plece work {t is different: I can do as much In one day as In flve days by the hour.” : Such is the speech that the Grocer bard put into the mouth of a tiler 700 years ago.—Youth's Companion.
Methods of Naming * - Newcomer to World Choosing a name for a new baby 18 always a matter of anxious constderation. ' e But in many lands this anxiety has been minimized by the laying down of rules to guide the cholce, says a writer in Science magazine. For instance, in Egypt the parents take three candles and the one that burns the brightest and longest determines the child’'s name. ' ' The Hindus allow the mother to name the baby. ' Then, when the baby {8 twelve days old, If the father does not like the chosen name, he selects another." : Then the two names are written on slips of paper and held over a lighted lamp, the one that burns the brighter being the name adopted. Hgyptians place 12 names in the Koran. One slip is drawn out, and the name on it is the name for the child. - Chinese girls are not named. The boys are named by their mothers. When they reach twenty the futher names them over agaln. Good Start Attached to the early morning train going east was a car for laborers. The lattice gate between this car and the one In front was closed, so that no one who belonged in the front passenger car would stray into the speclal car. A passenger standing on the back platform of the regular passenger coach peered curiously through this lattice gate and the open door into the car beyond. A wag In the laborers’ car promptly bleated out, “Ba-a-a, ba-a-a.” Immediately his comrades took it up, and “Ba-a-a, ba-a-a,” they went: in chorus, In solos, in duets, for all the world llke a cattle train loaded with sheep. It ended in a howl of laughter from all the men and as the car pulled out of the station it was evident they ‘had put themselves in good humor for the day's work.—Springfield Union.
Celtic History
The term ‘‘Celtic Renaissance” fs applied to the intellectual awakening and the renewal of interest during the latter part of the Nineteenth and the beginning of the Twentleth century, in the languages, literature, history and customs of the native inhabitants of Ireland, the Scottish highlands, Wales, Brittany, Cornwall and the Isle of Man. This movement may be sald to have started with the publication of J. C. Zeuss’ Grammatica Celtica in 1838. . The Society for the Preservation of the Irish Language was established in Ireland in 1877 and this was followed by the Gaelic league in 1893. The movement, was not confilned to Europe, but spread to Canada, the United States, Australasia, Argentina and other localities inhabited by persons of Celtic strain, :
Fate’s Grim Jest
About the middle of the Seventeenth century, when so-called witches were being persecuted in England, there were many fanatics who went about the country seeking out persons accused of witchcraft and forcing them to confess by means of examination and tortures. One man in particular, Matthew Hopkins, received the title of wltchfindear—xeneral because of his industry in the search. In a single year (1644) he brought 60 persons to the stcke. Belng finally accused of witchcraft himself, Hopkins was subJected to his own favorite test of swimming, aud, happening to float, was declared to be a wizard and put to death. —Kansas Olty Star.
| Ancient “Small Ad” The to-let “ad” in 79 A. D. was not totally like our own In phraseology, but palnted conspicuously in red and black letters on the sides of buildings, and was in vogue in Herculaneum and Pompell, according to the reports of the excavators who have been uncovering the ruins of the ancient cities—~burled in 7% A. D. One such advertisement I 8 said to have been translated as follows: © “On the estate ot Julia Felix, daughter of Spurius I"eli , ure to be let from the first to the sicth of the ides of August on a lease «f five years, a bath, 1 venereum and. ninety shops, bowers «nd upper apartments.” Pola Negri at Crystal Tuesday Wednesday and Thursday. - =S - Mrs. Franklin Kline and little daughter Barbara who had been visiting Mrs Feltheiser and other Ligonier relatives have returned to their home in Fort Wayne. e . S
THE LIGONIER BANNER, LIGONIER, INDIANA.
No write it 1926. = | Pola Negri in ‘Flower of the Night” this week at Crystal. Mr. and Mrs. L. E. Schloterback were in Ligonier today on their way: home from a visit in Hicksville: Qhio. Mr. and Mrs. Herinan Miller of Fort Wayne Sunday and were accompanied home by Mr, and Mrs. John W. Calbeck -who spent several weeks with their children in Ligonier and Cromwell. - : L Lost—A small rat terrier mostly white with a black and brown head, white face and{ a perfect star on her forehead. She "als,o has one round black spot on the back. Finder please réturn to Bob Hare for their are two small children wondering where their doggie has gone. It followed some man from Millers grocery. _ 2 v E . .V T. = ~ " Pola Negri in ‘Flower of tne .~igzht this week at Crystal, . . : Pay your Banner Subscription NOW
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o INNENE MISSES . JAN. Ist WAS DIVIDEND DAY , | For Pucferred Stockholders of Indiana & Michigan Electric Company
BT TS 1 eacte ; Jz/,-'di‘»', ; ST 2:‘ “;L‘:%LUUTQ;‘ I V*uTZfi: INVEST yu SAVINGS [ Buy your shares from any ‘e mploye of the Company —they are our salesmen
Be sure to see Reginald Denny at l Crystal tonight. : : ! J. H. Golder was home from Elkhart over Sundgay. ‘ Eggs have takén a drop in price and are now retailing in the Ligonier market at 35 cents the dozen. Real Estate Transfers., ... | Frederick @G. -Hieber to Frank P. Wood et al Out lot 24 Ligonier, "Mr. and Mrs. Dan Rench of Indian Village came to Ligonier to visit their daughnter Mrs. Willard Shell and family. . ‘Verner Hursey of Cromwell a former well known resident of Ligonier was in -the city Saturday calling on old friends. i ' ‘ ‘Attornéy and Mrs. W. H. ‘Wigton and son Bobby paid Mr. and Mrs. John Hurst of Indianapolis a visit Saturday and Sunday. - " Donald ‘Gilbert who is atending Goshen college came to Ligonier andl vigited over Sunday with his father Harry Gilbert. : | Sl ! Mr. and Mrs. George B. ‘Slate and 'Miss Lillian Kronk came from Goshen Sunday and visited Mr. and Mrs, W. €..8. Harrison. . » . ' Mr. and Mrs. Roy D. Keehn and children came from their home in Chicago and spent Sunday with Dr. a&('l Mrs. C. G. Keehn in this city. “Flower of the Night” the tale of a flaming Spanish belle who fought for honor and the man she loved in the lawless days when the Vigilantes ruled Califorina at Crystal Tuesday Wednesday and Thursday. . \ ‘Use your Guest Coupons tonight and see a good show for half price.
Mail coupon to order stock or for complete information . 4 - A INDIANA & MICHIGAN ELECTRIC CO. L - _ Preferred Stock Dept., South Bend, Indiana : ‘ (Mark Xin D’ .meeting yhur regquirements) D;’;ease send me free copy of booklet telling mere about . ur Preferred Stock and the Compoany. : DI wish to subscribe for ............... shares your Preferred Stoek at price of $lOO.OO and dividend per = share, Send bill to me showing exact amount due. o DI wish to subscribe for ..........shares your Preferred Stock on Easy Payment Plan of $lO per share down and $lO per share per month until $lOO.OO and dividend per share. Bas been paid. DPloa.s_e ship ................shares your Preferred Stock at : $lOO.OO and dividend per share with draft attached through i e Name of Your Bank *Street REvGeENeVstAT AR A N as ST ANS RS SRR vkaosn uvaeeiehaebasar it sirane i SRR S eRS S el il el L D s i s TR RSR T o Rl
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